The Construction of Memory in Interwar France

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2000-03-15
Publisher(s): Univ of Chicago Pr
List Price: $72.00

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Summary

One of the bloodiest conflicts in human history, World War I devastated France, leaving behind battlefields littered with the remains of the dead. Daniel Sherman takes a close look at the human impact of this Great War by examining the ways in which the French remembered their veterans and war dead after the armistice. Arguing that memory is more than just a record of experience, Sherman's cultural history offers a radically new perspective on how commemoration of WWI helped to shape postwar French society and politics. Sherman shows how a wartime visual culture saturated with images of ordinary foot soldiers, together with contemporary novels, memoirs, and tourist literature, promoted a distinctive notion of combat experience. The contrast between battlefield and home front, soldier and civilian was the basis for memory and collective gratitude. Postwar commemoration, however, also grew directly out of the long and agonized search for the remains of hundreds of thousands of missing soldiers, and the sometimes contentious debates over where to bury them. For this reason, the local monument, with its inscribed list of names and its functional resemblance to tombstones, emerged as the focal point of commemorative practice. Sherman traces every step in the process of monument building as he analyzes commemoration's competing goals--to pay tribute to the dead, to console the bereaved, and to incorporate mourners' individual memories into a larger political discourse. Extensively illustrated, Sherman's study offers a visual record of a remarkable moment in the history of public art. It is at once a moving account of a culture haunted by war and a sophisticated analysis of the political stakes of memory in the twentieth century. Winner of the 2000 J. Russell Major Prize of the American Historical Association

Table of Contents

Abbreviations ix
List of Illustrations
xi
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction: The Emergence of Commemoration 1(12)
Experience and Memory
13(52)
Narrating War
17(18)
Seeing Memory
35(14)
Lasting Impressions
49(16)
Bodies and Names
65(40)
An Immense Necropolis
71(12)
Inscribing Absence
83(11)
``This Precious Patrimony''
94(11)
Making a Sacrifice
105(38)
Structures
108(14)
Resources
122(14)
The Broken Plaque
136(7)
Seeing the Signified
143(72)
``A Kind of Anguished Terror'': Salons, Critics, and Artists
147(13)
``An Artistic Character'': Prefectoral Review Boards and Provincial Standards
160(10)
``All My Designs Are Approved'': The Business of Commemoration
170(10)
``So Superior to Panegyrics'': Monuments and Meanings
180(35)
Contested Spaces
215(46)
Sites of Commemoration
219(16)
For God and Country?
235(10)
Making It Local
245(12)
Requiem for an Elm Tree
257(4)
Dedication
261(50)
Patterns of Ceremony
265(16)
The Dead and the Living
281(14)
The Power of Memory
295(16)
Epilogue 311(22)
The Thirties: Dying of the Light
312(4)
The Sixties: Memory into History?
316(7)
The Nineties: Return of the Repressed
323(10)
Notes 333(74)
Index 407

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